Ghetto Informant Program
The GIP coincided with COINTELPRO - The FBI’s War on the Civil Rights Movement

The Ghetto Informant Program (GIP) was an intelligence-gathering operation run by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 1967 to 1973. Its official purpose was to collect information pertaining to riots and civil unrest.
Through GIP, the FBI recruited and paid more than 7000 Black and nonBlack people to infiltrate poor Black communities in the United States in order to have them join social justice groups, churches, social clubs, and other Black centered spaces and spy on them.
After the Watts Riots of 1965, and further unrest in Newark and Detroit in the summer of 1967, the US government mobilized to prepare for urban conflict. Its actions ranged from commissioning a report by the civilian Kerner Commission to mobilizing the army to prepare for martial law in American cities.
The order for GIP program came in a letter from Attorney General Ramsey Clark to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Clark wrote:
We have not heretofore had to deal with the possibility of an organized pattern of violence, constituting a violation of federal law, by a group of persons who make the urban ghetto their base of operation and whose activities may not have been regularly monitored by existing intelligence sources.
And:
As a part of the broad investigation which must necessarily be conducted ... sources or informants in black nationalist organizations, SNCC and other less publicized groups should be developed and expanded to determine the size and purpose of these groups and their relationship to other groups, and also to determine the whereabouts of persons who might be involved in instigating riot activity in violation of federal law.
The program was targeted at those likely to have information about ghetto happenings. Thus (according to an internal memo) it included people such as "the proprietor of a candy store or barber shop" in a ghetto area. These informants were "listening posts"—tools for blanket surveillance of a community or area.
GIP operated with no oversight from courts or Congress.
Informants monitored "Key Black Extremists" such as Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Elijah Muhammad, Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, Huey Newton, and more.
One of the first major projects involving the GIP was Operation POCAM, the FBI's effort to monitor and disrupt the 1968 Poor People's Campaign. Informants were later asked to report on Afro-American bookstores and investigate the existence of subversive literature.
At least 67 informants were members of the Black Panther Party (BPP), tasked with spreading disinformation as well as sending reports to the FBI.
Recent disclosures have suggested that photographer Ernest Withers was a paid FBI informant under the GIP.
In 1972, the FBI's Inspection Division began to express concern about using African-American informants specifically to investigate civil unrest. A memo dated November 24, 1972, notes that the GIP has produced abundant 'byproduct' information related to activities other than rioting.
It suggests that these informants be reclassified as Security, Extremist, Revolutionary Activities, or Criminal, and that civil unrest information continue to be collected as a byproduct from these same informants.
The GIP was terminated in July 1973, and informants were either reclassified or discontinued.
Concerns about FBI surveillance in the style of the Ghetto Informant Program has continued through the present day. Senator Patrick Leahy compared Operation TIPS to the GIP in 2002.
Source: Wikipedia
...
In retrospect, the COINTEPRO's of the 1960s were thoroughly successful in achieving their stated goals, "to expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize" the enemies of the State.
Victimization The most serious of the FBI disruption programs were those directed against "Black Nationalists.
" Agents were instructed to undertake actions to discredit these groups both within "the responsible Negro community" and to "Negro radicals," also "to the white community, both the responsible community and to `liberals' who have vestiges of sympathy for militant black nationalists simply because they are Negroes..."
A March 4th, 1968 memo from J Edgar Hoover to FBI field offices laid out the goals of the COINTELPRO - Black Nationalist Hate Groups program: "to prevent the coalition of militant black nationalist groups;"
"to prevent the rise of a messiah who could unify and electrify the militant black nationalist movement;" "to prevent violence on the part of black nationalist groups;" "to prevent militant black nationalist groups and leaders from gaining respectability;" and "to prevent the long-range growth of militant black nationalist organizations, especially among youth."
Included in the program were a broad spectrum of civil rights and religious groups; targets included Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, and Elijah Muhammad.
Source: COINTELPRO: The Untold American Story - By Paul Wolf with contributions from Robert Boyle, Bob Brown,
Tom Burghardt, Noam Chomsky, Ward Churchill, Kathleen Cleaver,
Bruce Ellison, Cynthia McKinney, Nkechi Taifa, Laura Whitehorn,
Nicholas Wilson, and Howard Zinn.
https://cldc.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/COINTELPRO.pdf
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Source: FBI: The Vault - https://vault.fbi.gov/ghetto-informant-program/Ghetto%20Informant%20Program%20Part%2001%20%28Final%29/view
Source: https://www.intelligence.senate.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/sites-default-files-94755-ii.pdf
Source: UC Berkley Library - https://www.lib.berkeley.edu/about/news/fbi
Source: https://www.zinnedproject.org/if-we-knew-our-history/fbi-war-civil-rights-movement/